Freston is a Neolithic causewayed enclosure at an archaeological site near the village of Freston in Suffolk, England. The Neolithic enclosure was first identified in 1969 from cropmarks in aerial photographs. At 8.55 hectares (21.1 acres), it is one of the largest causewayed enclosures in Britain, and would have required thousands of person-days to construct. The cropmarks show an enclosure with two circuits of ditches, and a palisade that ran between the two circuits. There is also evidence of a rectangular structure in the northeastern part of the site, which may be a Neolithic long house or an Anglo-Saxon hall. Excavation in 2019 indicated that the site was constructed in the mid–4th millennium BC. Other finds included oak charcoal fragments believed to come from the palisade, and evidence of a long ditch to the southeast that probably predated the enclosure, and which may have accompanied a long barrow, a form of Neolithic burial mound. The site has been protected as a scheduled monument since 1976.
Read more: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freston_causewayed_enclosure
_______________________________ Today's selected anniversaries:
1951:
Construction began in Busan, South Korea, on the United Nations Military Cemetery, the only United Nations cemetery in the world. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Nations_Memorial_Cemetery
1956:
Navvab Safavi, an Iranian Shia cleric and the founder of the fundamentalist group Fada'iyan-e Islam, was executed with three of his followers for attempting to assassinate Prime Minister Hossein Ala'. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navvab_Safavi
1969:
Thousands of Japanese police stormed the University of Tokyo after six months of nationwide leftist university student protests and occupations. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1968%E2%80%931969_Japanese_university_protests
1983:
Thirty years after his death, the International Olympic Committee presented commemorative medals to the family of American athlete Jim Thorpe, who had been stripped of his gold medals for playing semi-professional baseball before the 1912 Summer Olympics. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jim_Thorpe
_____________________________ Wiktionary's word of the day:
adorkable: (informal) Adorable in a dorky, socially awkward manner. https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/adorkable
___________________________ Wikiquote quote of the day:
I'm not always good with words. Some people are poets and have a beautiful way of saying things with words. But cinema is its own language. And with it you can say so many things, because you've got time and sequences. You've got dialogue. You've got music. You've got sound effects. You have so many tools. And so you can express a feeling and a thought that can't be conveyed any other way. It's a magical medium. --David Lynch https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/David_Lynch
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